Highly active PdCeOx composite catalysts for low-temperature CO oxidation, prepared by plasma-arc synthesis

•The plasma-arc method was applied to synthesize composite palladium–cerium catalysts.•The catalysts demonstrated the high efficiency in CO oxidation at low temperatures.•Carbon of PdCeC composite prevented sintering during high-temperature calcination.•The high-defect solid solution PdCeOx with hig...

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Published inApplied catalysis. B, Environmental Vol. 147; pp. 132 - 143
Main Authors Gulyaev, R.V., Slavinskaya, E.M., Novopashin, S.A., Smovzh, D.V., Zaikovskii, A.V., Osadchii, D.Yu, Bulavchenko, O.A., Korenev, S.V., Boronin, A.I.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 05.04.2014
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Summary:•The plasma-arc method was applied to synthesize composite palladium–cerium catalysts.•The catalysts demonstrated the high efficiency in CO oxidation at low temperatures.•Carbon of PdCeC composite prevented sintering during high-temperature calcination.•The high-defect solid solution PdCeOx with high concentration of Ce3+ formed.•TOF for the composite catalyst was higher than that of chemically prepared catalyst. The plasma-arc method was adapted for the synthesis of composite palladium–ceria catalysts, which were utilized for the low-temperature oxidation of carbon monoxide. The Pd/CeO2 catalysts were synthesized in two steps: step 1 – direct synthesis of palladium–cerium–carbon composite PdCeC in the plasma-arc chamber, and step 2 – calcination of the composite with carbon burnout in air at 600, 700, and 800°C. Catalytic testing using temperature-programmed reaction demonstrated the high efficiency of the synthesized catalysts during the oxidation of carbon monoxide and their ability to oxidize CO at temperatures as low as room temperature. In comparison with a catalyst that had similar morphology and palladium content but was prepared by coprecipitation, the synthesized catalyst showed that the calculated TOF value for the composite catalyst was two–three times higher than that of the catalyst prepared by chemical methods. A variety of physical methods (HRTEM, XRD, XPS, Raman spectroscopy and others) were used to examine the microstructure, composition and electronic state of the composite components in detail after the high-temperature calcination stage of catalyst synthesis. It was shown that high catalytic activity was provided by the formation of a high-defect fluorite structure of PdCeOx solid solution and highly dispersed PdOx nanoparticles. The XPS data suggest that carbon nanostructures mixed with palladium and cerium in the initial PdCeC composite prevent sintering during high-temperature calcination and play a key role in the formation of a high-defect solid solution of palladium in the CeO2 structure, which has a high concentration of Ce3+ and oxygen vacancies.
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ISSN:0926-3373
1873-3883
DOI:10.1016/j.apcatb.2013.08.043